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Books > Health, Home & Family > Home & house maintenance > DIY > Woodworking
The tablesaw is the heart of the woodworking shop. Here is practical, shop-tested advice for the beginning to the intermediate woodworker about choosing the right machine for your workshop, and the best saw blades for the materials you use. You'll learn how to tune any saw for top performance; where to stand and how to move to make safe and accurate cuts; how to lay out and saw precise grooves, tapers, and miters; and how to set up your saw for making identical parts. These are the basic elements of joining wood -- with your new skills, you will be able to build furniture and household projects that fit precisely together, every time.
Learn how to make 15 beautifully crafted projects for your home
using sustainable and upcycled materials. Step-by-step photography
and clear instructions will guide you through projects ranging from
the utterly simple to the technically advanced, that will elevate
your interior from the everyday to the extraordinary. Created by
designer-maker Tobias George, whose brand is inspired by a love of
good craftsmanship combined with a consciousness of materials,
Maker.Home will inspire you to fill your surroundings with
well-designed items. Suitable for beginner and experienced makers,
learn new processes or hone your skills, and discover the peaceful
satisfaction to be found through making by hand. Chopping board -
Wineglass rack - Copper tablet stand - Boot rack - Stool - Magnetic
knife holder - Coffee scoop - Concrete planters - Weaving loom -
Lamp - Wall-mounted storage - Bookshelf - Coffee table - Stationery
tidy - Clothes rack and storage.
A broad range of projects provide ideas for everyone from the
beginner to the more experienced carver. Readers learn how to make
bookracks and bookends, rustic picture frames, kitchen utensil
containers, a jewellery box and CD cabinet. Detailed instructions,
photographs and illustrations guide readers through the design and
making process, giving them the skills and confidence they need to
become efficient carvers, whilst gaining insight into woodcarving
traditions, practice and craftsmanship.Frederick Wilbur has been a
professional woodcarver for 30 years, producing original and
restoration work in a wide variety of styles. He has also written
for many leading woodcarving magazines.
Woodcarvers are always looking for new ideas, and this guide
provides a wide variety of great gift ideas - from traditional
objects like walking sticks, bowls, and pencil holders to earrings,
bracelets, and brooches. A section devoted to jewellery provides
literature on an often-neglected niche of woodcarving. Ideas for
specific holidays or special events like birthdays, graduations,
and holidays are also included. All the projects are photographed
and are accompanied by detailed, step-by-step instructions,
allowing novice carvers as well as more experienced woodworkers to
complete the pieces.
For more than twenty years, Roy Underhill has taught the techniques
of traditional woodcraft with muscle-powered tools. With his four
previous books and his popular PBS series, The Woodwright's Shop,
now in its sixteenth season, Roy has inspired millions to take up
chisel and plane. The master woodwright returns here with
instructions for handcrafting an appealing selection of projects
from the American woodworking tradition. The Woodwright's
Apprentice begins with directions for building a workbench. Each
successive project builds new skills for the apprentice
woodworker--from frame construction to dovetailing, turning,
steam-bending, and carving. Among the twenty items featured are an
African chair, a telescoping music stand, a walking-stick chair, a
fireplace bellows, and a revolving Windsor chair. Designed both for
woodworking novices and for more seasoned woodworkers looking for
enjoyable projects, the book includes step-by-step directions,
complete with easy-to-follow photographs and measured drawings, and
an illustrated glossary of tools and terms. All of the pieces
presented here are based on projects featured in past and upcoming
seasons of The Woodwright's Shop television show. |Amidst the
violent racism prevalent at the turn of the 20th century, African
American cultural elites, struggling to articulate a positive black
identity, developed a middle-class ideology of racial uplift.
Insisting that they were truly representative of the race's
potential, black elites espoused an ethos of self-help and service
to the black masses and distinguished themselves from the black
majority as agents of civilization; hence the phrase 'uplifting the
race.' A central assumption of racial uplift ideology was that
African Americans' material and moral progress would diminish white
racism. But Kevin Gaines argues that, in its emphasis on class
distinctions and patriarchal authority, racial uplift ideology was
tied to pejorative notions of racial pathology and thus was limited
as a force against white prejudice.
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